Jennifer Pritzker pledges $101k to fight anti-trans laws in TN

Col. Jennifer Pritzker, a Chicago philanthropist—and the world’s first openly transgender billionaire business owner—entered the fight for transgender rights in Tennessee this year in a big way. Now she is pledging hundreds of thousands of dollars to fight back.

Jennifer Pritzker, courtesy of the TAWANI Foundation

Jennifer Pritzker opposes anti-LGBTQ+ legislation

Back in April, when a number of anti-LGBTQ+ bills were moving through the Tennessee legislature, Jennifer Pritzker—whose family founded the Hyatt Hotels Group and whose net worth is around $2 billion—joined the Nashville LGBT Chamber of Commerce in condemning the bills. According to an article in The Hill, she said: “As a transgender woman, these unnecessary and hurtful laws are personal to me. As a businesswoman, my larger concern is the impact they will have on Tennessee’s reputation and, ultimately, economic well-being, as businesses and tourists turn elsewhere.”

In an opinion piece in The Tennessean she wrote, “Governor Lee and a majority of state lawmakers are creating an environment that is forcing me to consider pulling my business out of the state…” Now that the bills have passed, it appears that rather than pull out of Tennessee, she is dedicated to staying and fighting the new laws, announcing yesterday that she will donate $101,000 and additional six-figure future support to the ACLU from her TAWANI Foundation to fight Tennessee’s anti-transgender laws in court.

$101k pledge to ACLU-TN from Jennifer Pritzker

The ACLU and its Tennessee chapter has already announced on June 25 that they had filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of two businesses. The lawsuit argues that a state law requiring businesses to post signs outside transgender-friendly bathrooms is unconstitutional and violates businesses’ First Amendment rights against forced speech.

“It is with both alarm and resolve that I announce a $101,000 donation and additional six-figure support in the future to the ACLU to fight the growing anti-transgender laws appearing in Tennessee,” said Col. Jennifer Pritzker.  “These laws stigmatize an already vulnerable population and threaten to encourage abuse and violence like the tragic killing of Private First Class Barry Winchell, an outstanding young soldier murdered by his own comrades in an Army barracks simply for loving a person like me, a transgender woman,” Pritzker added.  

As American citizens and as human beings, we cannot allow the possibility of such incidents to reoccur in the twenty-first century. Pritzker, a business owner in Tennessee, noted how personal this topic is to her, having lived in Tennessee during her three-year tour.

“The number ‘101’ is a nod to my time serving as an infantry officer in the 101st Airborne Division,” explained Pritzker.

According to the release from the TAWANI Foundation, “Since its activation in World War II, the 101st has been on the side of defending the rights of all American citizens. Its members were a significant force in defeating the Nazis, and many members were wounded or lost their lives in the fight to end a murderous regime. The 101st Division continued its anti-fascist, anti-racist struggle on the home front after that. They escorted Black children into previously segregated schools in the 1950s, and since then, the Division has consistently served to defend human rights around the globe.”

“Anti-LGBTQ laws harm the economic well-being of the state, while respect for diversity and inclusion attract our nation’s best and brightest,” Pritzker said. “I stand ready to continue the good fight as necessary, including conferring directly with Governor Bill Lee and the Tennessee Legislature to find truly humane and just solutions to the issues raised by transgender equality. This should be done through candid, good-faith discussions that are sure to result in a better life for us all.”

Col. Pritzker is the founder, president, and CEO of TAWANI Enterprises, and founder of the TAWANI Foundation, and is widely known for her philanthropy, historic preservation, and commitment to military and veterans’ issues. The first-of-its-kind Tennessee law that the ACLU is fighting, went into effect July 1, 2021, and is one of many that Tennessee and other states recently enacted that target the LGBTQ community